Widow of the Pecos (B Minor)

Genre

Poetry

Finish

Poetry- honorable mention

Student

Elijah Wynn

Award

Robert and Marcy Branski Poetry Scholarship

School

Traverse City West Senior High

Year

Junior

In forty-six many men marched

From Missouri escaping the Eastern noise

And through the right of rifles raised

Our flag flew in that Turquoise

On the Estacado—

My mind was made

A widow by the name of Maria

Allured me to her shade

She lived in the arroyo

With the one man God never took

Her son José called me padre

With the holiest of looks

My skin burned red like embers

‘Pon soil without rain

But from Navajo Country, well past September

The storm—cobalt—it came

Overjoyed, I screamed to the sky

And ran to plant more corn

From Maria’s shore of the Pecos

I hear a horrid scream forlorn

When I get back ‘midst thunderclaps

I find half my house is gone

And as I let that flood subside

I see the body of my son.

My wife? She disappeared,

like those hillside fireballs,

And the territory’s farmers demand

With my life I pay all

So there’s no use in staying here

I’ll take the next train to California

But know: what you build God’ll take away

So they call her La Llarona

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